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The party was in full swing in Soho on the first weekend after a long lockdown.
The family of an Italian woman who died weeks after having the Oxford-AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine have told Sky News they are taking legal action to establish whether the jab was to blame. The case comes after 55-year-old Augusta Turiaco, from Messina, Sicily, received her COVID jab on 11 March before her condition worsened in the days following her vaccination.
While the government works out how to categorise countries for a traffic light system, a new model predicts only eight countries will be on the ‘green’ list
Rep. Greene accused the media of ‘false narratives’ and focusing on race to ‘divide the American people with hate through identity politics’
Dr Susan Hopkins has urged people to ‘take caution’ as India variant emerges in the UK
It comes after warnings were issued from a leading scientist that new coronavirus variants could set back the UK’s lockdown easing.
Everything you need to know ahead of tonight’s WBO world title bout
A fire engulfed part of Table Mountain in Cape Town, South Africa, on April 18, prompting evacuation orders for hikers in the area per Table Mountain National Park.Around 129 firefighters were dispatched to the scene after the fire was reported at 9 am local time, TMNP said.“It can be confirmed that the Rhodes Memorial Restaurant has unfortunately burnt down,” the national park said. Local reports described the restaurant as a popular scenic venue.The fire started above Philip Kgosana Drive/Hospital Bend, according to park officials, spreading quickly due to high temperatures of 36 degrees “and an extremely low relative humidity of under 10%.”The fire also spread to the veld above the University of Cape Town (UCT) upper campus and to areas below the M3, closing nearby roads, TMNP said.Video filmed by Claire Berzen shows a burst of fire in the area near Rhodes Memorial Restaurant as a firefighting helicopter flies overhead. Credit: Claire Berzen via Storyful
The leader of Sinn Fein has said she is sorry for the murder of Lord Mountbatten at the hands of the IRA following the funeral of the Duke of Edinburgh. Mary Lou McDonald, the President of the republican party, said the death of the Duke’s uncle in 1979 was “heartbreaking” and that it was her responsibility to “lead from the front”. Her comments represent a significant shift from her predecessor Gerry Adams, who expressed regret over the assassination but refused to retract his claims that Lord Mountbatten knew the risk of travelling to Ireland.
Hollywood legend Robert De Niro is unable to turn down acting roles because he must pay for his estranged wife's expensive tastes, the actor's lawyer has claimed. Caroline Krauss told a Manhattan court that he is struggling financially because of the pandemic, a massive tax bill and the demands of Grace Hightower, who filed for divorce in 2018 after 21 years of marriage. The court has been asked to settle how much De Niro should pay Ms Hightower, 66, until the terms of the prenuptial agreement the couple negotiated in 2004 takes effect. “Mr De Niro is 77 years old, and while he loves his craft, he should not be forced to work at this prodigious pace because he has to,” Ms Krauss told the court. “When does that stop? When does he get the opportunity to not take every project that comes along and not work six-day weeks, 12-hour days so he can keep pace with Ms Hightower’s thirst for Stella McCartney?”
The former Spice Girl’s 47th was a star-studded affair.
Boris Johnson should relinquish his right to decide when possible breaches of the ministerial code warrant investigation, according to the chair of the Committee for Standards in Public Life. In a letter to the prime minister, Lord Evans argued the power to launch a probe into the behaviour of members of the government should instead be held by the next independent adviser on ministerial interests. It comes as questions continue to mount over contacts serving ministers had with former prime minister David Cameron in relation to his lobbying on behalf of the now-bankrupt finance firm, Greensill Capital.
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Moment ‘usually only witnessed by the royal family,’ says commentator
The Met Police said the officer was standing by a stationery police vehicle on Dartmouth Park Hill in London when he was hit by a car that then failed to stop.
Damian Lewis has paid tribute to his wife Helen McCrory, describing her as "a meteor in our life", following her death at the age of 52. The actress was best known for playing powerful women such as Shelby family matriarch Aunt Polly in the BBC drama Peaky Blinders, Narcissa Malfoy in the Harry Potter films and the home secretary in James Bond film Skyfall. Lewis said his wife had "lived by the principle of kindness and generosity" and always took an interest in others and "made them feel special". Writing in the Sunday Times, he said: "I've never known anyone so consciously spread happiness. "Even when dying in her last few days, when talking to our wonderful carers, she repeatedly said, 'thank you so much' in her half-delirious state. "She always asked people how they were, always took an interest, made each person she met feel special, as though they were the only person in the room. "Gave them her full attention. Made them laugh, always. There were few funnier people - she was funny as hell." Lewis said that in the weeks before her death his wife had joked about his future relationships with women, saying that "love isn't possessive". "She said to us from her bed, 'I want Daddy to have girlfriends, lots of them, you must all love again, love isn't possessive, but you know, Damian, try at least to get through the funeral without snogging someone'," he said. He said that McCrory was "not interested in navel-gazing (or) self-reflection", and passed her positivity on to others. "Helen believed you choose happiness," he said. "I've never known anyone able to enjoy life as much. "Her ability to be in the present and enjoy the moment was inspirational. Nor was she interested in navel-gazing. No real interest in self-reflection; she believed in looking out, not in. Which is why she was able to turn her light so brightly on others." McCrory was born in Paddington, London, to a Welsh mother and Scottish father, and was the eldest of three children. She attended school in Hertfordshire, then spent a year living in Italy, before returning to London to study acting at the Drama Centre. She was a regular figure in prestige TV dramas, including the ITV hit Quiz, the BBC political series Roadkill, psychological thriller MotherFatherSon and the adaptation of Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials. She was made an OBE in the 2017 New Year Honours for services to drama. Lewis said that his wife was "fiercely proud" of her career as an actress and approached it with "a rigour, an honesty and an intelligence that made others rise to meet her". He said she was seen as "royalty" within the industry and was nicknamed "Dame Helen" by many. "Although we'll never know now whether that would have become a reality, I think secretly, we do know," he said. McCrory and Lewis married in 2007 and share a daughter Manon, born in 2006, and son Gulliver, born in 2007. Lewis said his wife had been "utterly heroic" in her illness and told her children repeatedly she had "lived the life I wanted to". "She has exhorted us to be courageous and not afraid," he said. "She has been utterly heroic in her illness. Funny, of course - generous, brave, uncomplaining, constantly reminding us all of how lucky we've been, how blessed we are." He added that McCrory's "most exquisite act of bravery and generosity" had been to "normalise" her death. "She's shown no fear, no bitterness, no self-pity, only armed us with the courage to go on and insisted that no one be sad, because she is happy," he said. "I'm staggered by her. She's been a meteor in our life."
The Czech Republic is expelling 18 Russian diplomats over suspicions that Russian intelligence services were involved in an ammunition depot explosion in 2014, its government said on Saturday. The central European country is a NATO and EU member state, and the expulsions and allegations have triggered its biggest row with Russia since the end of the communist era in 1989. Its actions could prompt Russia to consider closing the Czech Republic's embassy in Moscow, a diplomatic source cited by Russian news agency Interfax suggested.
Family of three contract Covid from infected neighbours in hotel quarantine in Sydney. NSW Health reclassifies three coronavirus cases to locally-acquired after testing showed they shared same viral sequence as infected family next door
A highly emotional Prince Charles could be seen with tears in his eyes as he bade the final farewell to his father Prince Philip at a moving Windsor Castle ceremony. The Prince of Wales, 72, was visibly distraught as he followed the coffin as he walked shoulder-to-shoulder with his sister Anne, The Princess Royal behind the Duke of Edinburgh’s coffin. In St George’s Chapel, the prince had tears in his eyes as he put on a black face mask before taking a seat next to his wife Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall.
Beijing anger as pro-democracy documentary wins Oscar-nomination. ‘Ironically, it’s actually promoting us,’ says Norwegian director of low-budget Hong Kong film, Do Not Split